The Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXVI, No. 66-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, August 12, 1976 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Clericals vote to decertify By GEORGE LOBSENZ By the scant margin of 55 votes, University clericals voted to disband their year-old union, United Auto Work- ers (UAW) local 2001, in a five day election which ended yesterday. Out of some 3,300 clericals on the Ann Arbor, Dearborn and Flint campuses, 1,167 votes were cast to decertify and 1,112 votes were for retaining the union. A total of 2,298 ballots were cast, avoter turn-out which substantially exceeded the June union officer elections. THE ELECTION culminated a decerti- fication drive orchestrated by a clerical group called the Committee for Decerti- fication. Last May, the group filed a decertifi- cation petition with 1,131 signatures-a number exceeding the required 30 per cent of the bargaining unit-with the Michigan Employment Relations Com- mission (MERC). After an early June meeting between union officials and de- certification representatives, the August election date was set. In the weeks prior to the election, de- certification leaders said the motivation behind the move was chiefly disillusion- ment with the contract negotiated last summer by a union bargaining team. Compounding the problem was consider- able dissension within the union between two clerical factions grappling for con- trol of the local. Decertification organizers were under- standably satisfied by the results but had only kind words for their opponents. "I'm very happy," said spokeswoman Irene Smith. "At the same time, I empa- thize with the other side-it was a battle of beliefs and principles." As for the future of clericals at the University, Smith said she was "very positive." "I think that they (the University) will be very fair, just as they have al- ways been. They'll give clericals a fair deal." MEANWHILE, Union President Debbie Moorehead said she felt that the de- certification of the union was "a big mistake." "There's no reason for tis (clericals) to believe that gains made in (last sum- mer's) c o n t r a c t will continue-and there's certainly no reason to believe any improvements will be made," she added. "And if there are any more prob- lems with the budget-we might be fac- ing layoffs and that'll be tough." Asked whether she felt any bitterness t o w a r d s decertification organizers, Moorehead said, "No, I guess I really don't-I think some of their concerns were valid ones-and they're ones the union didn't meet." Testimony conflicts confuse Postill trial By LANI JORDAN CHELSEA - Two conflicting testimonies yesterday added to the confusion during the third day of Sheriff Fred Postill's pre- liminary hearing on felonious assault charges. County J a i 1 Administrator Frank Donley and suspended sheriff's deputy Basil Baysinger, both participants in a July 11 w e d d i n g reception brawl in Chelsea, each offered a differ- ent version of events leading up to and following the incident. DONLEY'S testimony w a s consistant with that of most prosecution witnesses, implying that Postill had acted only in his capacity as sheriff to break up the fight which began at 1:30 a.m. in the parking lot of the Chelsea fairgrounds. As the people he was attend- ing the reception with began to leave, Donley stated, he looked for the sheriff inside the hall and then went outside where he saw Postill talking with Bay- singer. "The sheriff was talking to Baysinger about some problems at the jail," Donley said. "I heard him say 'Mike (Baysing- er's nickname) you're going to have to clean up your act (at the jail) or you may find your- self suspended'." DONLEY testified that he (Donley) then called Baysinger a "goddamn liar." Baysinger retorted with a similar com- ment and the two continued to argue, poking each other in the chest. Postill pushed Donley away and Baysinger hit the sheriff on the back of his head. Donley then struck Baysinger, who turned and ran toward the reception hall. Although Baysinger's w if e Shirley was a witness to the brawl neither County Prosecu- tor Lynwood Noah nor Postill's attorney, Neal Bush questioned Donley about her role in the in- cident. During his two and a half hours on the witness stand, Bay- singer testified that the brawl began when Postill and Donley invited him outside to discuss some problems at the jail. "DONLEY (THEN) accused me of campaigning against Pos- till," said Baysinger. Baysinger contends that Don- ley continued to accuse him, saying that he had given infor- mation about jail occorances to Ann Arbor News reporter Wil- liam Treml. "I denied it and asked for proof," Baysinger said. HE ADDED that his wife had joined the three in the parking lot, when Donley began cursing at him. Baysinger turned to his wife, saying, "Shirley let's go." "Postill and Donley grabbed me and threw me up against a car," he continued. "Then Don- ley said 'You son of a bitch, you're not leaving'." From this point the testimon- ies of both Donley and Baysing- er contain accounts of events occuring after the fight moved into the hall. Although Donley and other witnesses state that the three fought briefly three times in the hall Baysinger con- tends that violence broke out in two additional instances. BAYSINGER added that Pos- till had attempted to stab and choke him with a pair of hand- cuffs. "I couldn't breath; my partial plate had become loose and was lodged in my throat," he said. No other witnesses testified See CONFLICTING, Page 5 Doily Photo by SCOTT ECCKER WASHTENAW COUNTY Sheriff Fred Postill makes a point during a break in a preliminary hearing on felonious assault charges being considered against him. The charges resulted from a fight last month involving Postill, Deputy Basil Bay- singer and Jail Administrator Frank Donley. Attack on Israeli airliner thwarted ISTANBUL, Turkey (P) - A grenade explosion ripped through a line of pas- sengers waiting to board a Tel Aviv- bound Israeli El Al jetliner last night, and Turkish police shot it out with a group of terrorists apparently trying to attack the aircraft. Four persons were killed in the ex- plosion and 10 to 15 were wounded, the radio -said. The semiofficial Anatolia news agency said two terrorists were captured and identified themselves as Palestinians. THE STATE RAIO said Turkish se- curity police stationed at the airport thwarted the terrorists' attempt to reach the Israeli plane, parked 100 yards from the terminal. The aircraft was undam- aged and flew on to Israel. The flight originated in Istanbul: The radio said the casualties occurred when the terrorists threw a grenade into a line of passengers in the terminal building, but a passenger told newsmen when the plane landed at Tel Aviv that the explosion may have been accidental. "The terrorists waited in line with the other passengers until the baggage check station, when one of their suitcases blew up," the passenger said. ANOTHER passenger said, "I was de- scending a stairway to a boarding bus when I heard an explosion." The Anatolia news agency said the two captured terrorists told police they were members of the "Dr. George Habash Organization," presumably a reference to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP). Habash heads this group, one of many splinter Palestinian organizations. The PFLP has been responsible for a number of hijackings, including a spec- tacular one in 1970 in which four planes were taken in coordinated attacks and later blown up. A Pan Am Boeing 747 was blown up in Cairo Sept. 6, 1970, and five days later a Trans World Airlines 707, a Swissair DC8 and a VC10 of Brit- ish Overseas Airways Corp. were blown up in Amman, Jordan. An attempt to hijack an El Al plane at the same time was unsuccessful and one terrorist was killed. THE STATE RADIO said the two cap- tured men, identified as Mahdi Muham- med, 22, and Hussein Muhammed al Rashid, 27, said Libya financed them. They were carrying Kuwaiti passports, the radio said. Anatolia said the terrorists were armed with grenades, pistols and a submachine gun. It said they took a Turkish police- woman hostage and bargained with authorities for more than an hour after See ISRAELI, Page 5